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#1
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I have heard talk about that under stress testing of airplanes (eg. big
Boing machines), they bend the wings so much that they touch each otherover the airplane? Has anybody seen such photos, or is this just a lie? |
#2
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Not quite that far, but there is an article with a picture
at http://hsc.csu.edu.au/engineering_st...corrosion.html -- James H. Macklin ATP,CFI,A&P -- The people think the Constitution protects their rights; But government sees it as an obstacle to be overcome. some support http://www.usdoj.gov/olc/secondamendment2.htm See http://www.fija.org/ more about your rights and duties. wrote in message oups.com... |I have heard talk about that under stress testing of airplanes (eg. big | Boing machines), they bend the wings so much that they touch each | otherover the airplane? | Has anybody seen such photos, or is this just a lie? | |
#3
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You can see it fail during stress testing of the 777 in the video
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg...80642?v=glance The wing tips certainly aren't close to touching each other but its still amazing to watch. When it breaks, it makes some noise. -Robert |
#4
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![]() Quote:
Not a lie that they perform this test, although as previously pointed out, the spar fails long before the wing-tips meet. I remember seeing a PBS/History/Discover channel program about the initial production of the B777. They had impressive footage of the destructive load testing of the wings. IIRC they failed at a 40-something degree deflection. I've have also seen footage on the web site of one of the German sailplane manufacturers (A. Schleicher, Schempp-Hirth, or Glaser Dirks, perhaps) of the destructive test of a new wing design with a carbon fiber spar. That was very impressive and violent. V7 |
#6
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"Vic7" wrote in message
... ... I've have also seen footage on the web site of one of the German sailplane manufacturers (A. Schleicher, Schempp-Hirth, or Glaser Dirks, perhaps) of the destructive test of a new wing design with a carbon fiber spar. That was very impressive and violent. Testing to Destruction of the DG-1000 Wing Camera-inside: normal: 4,88 MB http://www.dg-download.de/Videos/bruchversuch-i-s.mpg high-speed: 23,5 MB http://www.dg-download.de/Videos/bruchversuch-i.mpg Camera-outside: high-speed 26,3 MB http://www.dg-download.de/Videos/bruchversuch-a.mpg -- Geoff The Sea Hawk at Wow Way d0t Com remove spaces and make the obvious substitutions to reply by mail Spell checking is left as an excercise for the reader. |
#7
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What is the point of that extreme testing?
Capt. Geoffrey Thorpe wrote: "Vic7" wrote in message ... ... I've have also seen footage on the web site of one of the German sailplane manufacturers (A. Schleicher, Schempp-Hirth, or Glaser Dirks, perhaps) of the destructive test of a new wing design with a carbon fiber spar. That was very impressive and violent. Testing to Destruction of the DG-1000 Wing Camera-inside: normal: 4,88 MB http://www.dg-download.de/Videos/bruchversuch-i-s.mpg high-speed: 23,5 MB http://www.dg-download.de/Videos/bruchversuch-i.mpg Camera-outside: high-speed 26,3 MB http://www.dg-download.de/Videos/bruchversuch-a.mpg -- Geoff The Sea Hawk at Wow Way d0t Com remove spaces and make the obvious substitutions to reply by mail Spell checking is left as an excercise for the reader. |
#8
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Stubby wrote:
What is the point of that extreme testing? To confirm the design calculaions and assumptions before placing human life at risk. Matt |
#9
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![]() Matt Whiting wrote: Stubby wrote: What is the point of that extreme testing? To confirm the design calculaions and assumptions before placing human life at risk. Is it even possible to operate an airframe in a way that will produce wing-bending of that degree? If so, I believe human life will have already been in risk long before. It's unrealistic and I believe the value of "accelerated testing" was debunked about 30 years ago. |
#10
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Stubby wrote:
Is it even possible to operate an airframe in a way that will produce wing-bending of that degree? Yes. In the break test, wings must withstand the rated G load multiplied with a safety fator of 1.5. Gliders are usually rated for 5.4 G (or some such), which causes impressive wing bending. IIRC, the wing in the DG video broke when it reached the factor 1.7, which made the manufactorer somewhat unhappy, because it proved that the wing had been designed too strong, which means too heavy and too expensive. They have corrected that now. Stefan |
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